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Percy Fawcett Vinyl Wall Graphic Decal Sticker Poster
List Price: $69.99
Sale Price: $49.00
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SIZE: 5'8''x23in - Wall Graphic of Percy Fawcett, an explorer, archaeologist, and artillery officer. He explored the jungles of Brazil to find "Z", a supposed uncharted ancient lost city. Somewhere during his expidition, he mysteriously disappeared. It is said that Fawcett was the inspiration for Indiana Jones. This product is made in the USA and produced in 7 to 10 business days plus the shipping time to your location. This contour cut repositionable vinyl decal is printed on Phototex film.
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Charlie's Angels - The Complete First Season
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $7.50
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All 22 episodes from season one--including "Hellrider," "Angels in Chains," "Target: Angels," "Angels on Wheels," and "The Blue Angels"--are featured in a five-disc set. 19 1/2 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; featurette; DVD-ROM content. **22 episodes on 5 discs. 19 1/2 hrs.**
America's guiltiest pleasure of 1976--the inaugural season of Charlie's Angels--has returned in all its jiggly, jolly glory in this tidy boxed set. It's hard to describe just how captivated the nation's media and viewing public were with cheesemeister Aaron Spelling's ABC-TV hit, but for awhile Charlie's Angels was wildly popular appointment television at its most self-consciously banal. The first season's three (and best-remembered) belles--lioness Farrah Fawcett (then Farrah Fawcett-Majors), pin-up babe Jaclyn Smith, and Thinking Man's beauty Kate Jackson--were something like primetime Spice Girls, gracing countless magazine covers and bestselling posters. The idea (even if a fan of the show didn't happen to be a straight male) was that one was compelled to choose a favorite angel as a kind of ink-blot window onto one's subconscious life. While the 2000 Angels feature film (starring Cameron Diaz, etc.) kept faith with the original show's self-mockingly sloppy storytelling, there's nothing like seeing the old episodes for a lesson in narrative hubris. Basically, the three leading characters were bored policewomen wooed away to a private firm owned and operated by the unseen sybarite, Charlie (voiced--over speakerphone--by an uncredited John Forsythe). After a long set-up each week, the girls' investigations typically saw them going undercover: as fashion models--no great stretch--in "Night of the Strangler"; nurses in "Terror on Ward One"; roller-derby stars in "Angels on Wheels"; and vulnerable convicts (of course) in "Angels In Chains." The exploitation factor is not as bad as it might have been. The cast was so glamorous, their chemistry so perfect, Charlie's Angels never became a mere meat market. Despite such nods to modernity as Fawcett's no-bra look, the episodes were old-fashioned in their heroine-in-peril appeal, yet there was a difference: The Angels looked out for themselves and each other. --Tom Keogh
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I Love Lucy - The Complete Seasons 7-9
List Price: $29.98
Sale Price: $16.97
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All 13 episodes from the three-year run of "The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour," which continued the Connecticut adventures of the Ricardos and Mertzes--including "Lucy Takes a Cruise to Havana," "Lucy Hunts Uranium," "Lucy Makes Room for Danny," "The Ricardos Go to Japan," and "Lucy Meets the Moustache"--are featured in a four-disc set. 11 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; deleted scenes; bloopers; featurettes; more. **13 episodes on 4 discs. 11 hrs.**
From Lucy-tormented Hollywood A-listers and bongo-propelled production numbers to archival goodies such as long-lost footage, there is much to love in this collection of all 13 episodes from The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show (also known as The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour). Following I Love Lucy's sixth and final season, these monthly (give or take) specials reunited America with Ricky and Lucy (and Keith Thibodeaux's adorable Little Ricky, still living the country life in Connecticut. The expanded, hour-long format allowed for celebrity guest stars and excursions to far-flung locales, such as Japan and Mexico. Not matter where they go, Lucy can always be counted on to act, in Desi's words, "a little crazy in the head," which is how she winds up masquerading as Ernie Kovacs' chauffeur in "Lucy Meets the Moustache" (an episode making its home-video debut), dangling Milton Berle from a construction crane in "Milton Berle Hides Out at the Ricardos," or sparking a uranium uproar in Las Vegas in "Lucy Hunts Uranium." A highlight of this set is the first-ever home video release of the uncut version of "Lucy Takes a Cruise to Havana," a flashback episode in which Lucy meets Ricky on a "maiden voyage" to Cuba. She also meets future best friend Ethel (Vivian Vance) and her new husband Fred (a toupeed William Frawley), and goes overboard for her first celebrity sighting, Rudy Vallee. Because these episodes do not play as often in syndication, they seem fresher than their endlessly re-run counterparts. They are full of delights for movie, TV, and Lucy buffs, among them, Fred MacMurray getting "Uranium" fever, Maurice Chevalier singing "Yankee Doodle Boy" in the "Mexico" episode, prolific character actor Sid Melton as a bellboy in the "Alaska" episode, and a va-voom Vance decked out as maid and a dance hall girl, respectively, in the "The Celebrity Next Door" and "Milton Berle" episodes. Among this set's prodigious bonus features include 1951 color footage that an audience member surreptitiously filmed, rediscovered scenes that were cut from the original broadcasts, and a filmed presentation to Westinghouse, which sponsored the series. If you don't add this to your library, you have some 'splainin' to do. --Donald Liebenson
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Queer as Folk - The Final Season (Collector's Edition)
List Price: $49.99
Sale Price: $16.69
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Gay has rarely been so glamorous as in the American version of Queer as Folk. But the show's success rests on more than hard bodies and glossy, picture-perfect sex (though there's an abundance of that); this series gave its characters a multidimensional richness that rivals more high-profile programs like Six Feet Under or The Sopranos, while tackling an impressive breadth of social and political issues without ever (well, almost never) feeling preachy. The fifth and final season lays out its themes with authority: Alpha-gay Brian (Gale Howard) buys and revamps the sex club Babylon, declaring promiscuity and independence as a gay birthright, while Brian's oldest friend Michael (Hal Sparks, Talk Soup) embraces domesticity with his partner Ben (Robert Gant); the flamboyant Emmett (Peter Paige) finds success as a tv personality, only to find his persona may trap him in a stereotype; and Ted (Scott Lowell) grapples with body prejudices within the gay community. Meanwhile, the crumbling relationship of Mel (Michelle Clunie) and Lindsay (Thea Gill) takes a more troubling turn when Michael demands more rights as the father of their daughter. Most tv series would take a topic like this last legal wrangle and stretch it over an entire season, but Queer as Folk is more ambitious; the writers recognize that the resolution of one problem is rarely the end of the story, that muddy consequences can be as dramatically compelling as head-to-head conflict. This aggressive and effective plotting, combined with the show's willingness to explore the complexities of every issue--be it assimilation or the coming out of a celebrity--results in an increasing emotional power as the series steamrolls towards its final episode. Some subplots can be silly (Brian has a ridiculous stud-off with a new hot guy in town), the dialogue can sometimes veer from wit to camp cliches, and the omnipresence of sculpted, muscular physiques is absurd and even a little alienating for some viewers, but Queer as Folk's strengths--the compassion and intelligence of the writers, the commitment and nuance of the acting--make this show a true television landmark and a pleasure to watch. And then, of course, there's all that graphic and lovingly photographed sex. Rosie O'Donnell and Cyndi Lauper make guest appearances, and Sharon Gless (Cagney & Lacey) continues her much-loved performance as Michael's mother, Debbie. --Bret Fetzer
All 13 episodes from season five are featured in a five-disc set. 13 hrs. total. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital stereo, Spanish Dolby Digital stereo; deleted scenes; behind-the-scenes footage; biographies; music video; photo gallery; more. **13 episodes on 5 discs. 13 hrs.**
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Barbie Collector Farrah Fawcett Doll
List Price: $34.99
Sale Price: $34.81
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Farrah Fawcett is an American icon and world famous for her classic red bathing suit from the iconic 1976 poster. The body of the Barbie Collector Farrah Fawcett Doll is molded in the pose from the poster. She wears her iconic red bathing suit and comes with a blanket that is displayed in the poster. It's a must-have favorite for any Barbie Collector -- including the adult collector. Product Dimensions: 7.5 (L) x 3.38 (W) x 13 (H)Age: 6 years and up
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What She Saw...: A Novel
List Price: $23.95
Sale Price: $2.13
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Sometimes in a moment of limbo or confusion, it's advisable to make a list. An inventory of accomplishments, a chart of pros and cons. Lucinda Rosenfeld's first novel takes as its form a list of past boyfriends. Each section finishes the sentence begun in its title, What She Saw... in "Roger Mancuso, or 'The Stink Bomb King of Fifth Grade.'" Later, in college, it's "Humphrey Fung, or 'The Anarchist Feminist.'" The book's shape and humor come from the gathering logic of this catalog, how our heroine is repeatedly fooled by the illusions of lust, always looking for something new, someone who can eclipse the failed romances of the past. Rosenfeld's protagonist, Phoebe Fine, is a sharp-tongued brainiac with rotten self-esteem. Born and raised in suburban New Jersey, she's the daughter of professional classical musicians, hippie theater types who embarrass their kids; they are always going into geeky raptures on the subject of chamber music or obscure lost arts. Phoebe wishes she could be considered "normal." She wishes she had blond hair and perfect teeth, but instead she's painfully ordinary: in the chapter "Jason Barry Gold, or 'The Varsity Lacrosse Stud'" Rosenfeld riffs expertly on the subject of Phoebe's ordinariness: That's how ugly she was--ugly by virtue of the fact that she was unmemorable, a slab of alabaster awaiting a sculptor who never arrived, a "nothing burger" if there ever was one. Take her nose: it just kind of ended, and her forehead just kind of began--kind of like the weeks in a year and the years in a life. It was the same with her waist and her hips, and her neck and her shoulders. There was nothing definitive about her. She was just this filet of human flesh--just this blah girl running laps behind the gym until she thought her legs would snap, her heart explode. The search for true love keeps Phoebe in a state of high anxiety. It's a wonder she ever gets any sleep. When the right guy gives her the right kind of attention, she's queen for a day. Alone, without the prospect of a lover, she starves herself, drinks too much, occasionally stares into the mystery of her past. What did she see in those men? What did they see in her? At once erotic and awkward, lightweight and troubling, Rosenfeld's debut possesses a powerful charm. Readers who grew up in the '70s and '80s will recognize the landmarks: Farah Fawcett posters, boring social studies classes explaining glasnost. Rosenfeld's a former New York Post nightlife columnist, and What She Saw... has the quick pace, twittering freshness, and panicked hipness of a club-hopper. Deadpan and stylish, it's a novel whose author is out to prove herself. And prove herself she does, in spades. --Emily White
Beginning in fifth grade, Phoebe Fine, the daughter of an oboist in suburban New Jersey, finds that love is a risky game to play. There is Roger Mancuso, who offers Phoebe her first cigarette, her first kiss, and her first experience of loss. There is Spitty Clark, the frat boy and inveterate party animal who's a possible criminal but also somehow a man of honor. Later on, as a young woman living in New York, Phoebe crosses the path of arrogant Pablo Miles (né Peter Mandelbaum), who licks her hand moments after they meet. And so it goes, as Phoebe struggles to reconcile her conflicting desires for safety and adventure, sympathy and conquest. Lucinda Rosenfeld relates Phoebe's serial, seriocomic encounters with freshness, range, economy, and emotional precision:"She understood the jealousy emaciation aroused in other women.""She couldn't persuade herself to spend an entire hour's salary on a piece of bread and three zucchini rounds.""Their first date was more like an appointment. To screw."Unexpected, absorbing, and likely to elicit strong identification among men and women alike, What She Saw . . . serves up acute observations and serious ideas--Phoebe's recognition of her complicity in the disenchantments she endures, the intersection of Eros and ambition--with stealthy charm. The sum of these parts is an intriguing, funny, sharp, and occasionally devastating rendition of that most basic and crucial of human stories: growing up. The vision in What She Saw . . . is perfect.
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poster girls
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20 page full layout of 80's pin up girls in color measures 12 1/2 X 10 everybody famous farrah fawcett, cheryl tiegs, suzanne somers, linda carter, cheryl ladd,susan anton...and many others great retro investment
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FARRAH FAWCETT 70s Shot COMPUTER MOUSE PAD #2
Sale Price: $9.99
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Mouse pad is brand new in excellent condition. Mouse pad measures 9 inches by 8 inches and is 1/8th of an inch thick. Mousepad is made of a durable heat resistant polyester fabric top, and backed with a non slip rubber. Mousepad will be shipped the day of purchase (including Saturday) or next business day.
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ORIGINAL Vintage 1977 Farrah Fawcett POSTER print Iconic FOLLOW-UP T-Shirt
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The infamous follow-up print to Farrah Fawcett's multi-million dollar Poster campaign. NEVER BEFORE SEEN, American Ringer EXCLUSIVE! This vintage print is extremely rare and often referred to as the "No Smile Shot," which is very unlike the then, always smiling, Mrs. Lee Majors! Original vintage from the American Ringer Clothing Co.
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ORIGINAL Vintage 1976 Farrah Fawcett POSTER PRINT Licensed Iron-On T-Shirt
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ORIGINAL Farrah Fawcett's multi-million selling poster print t-shirt! American Ringer Clothing EXCLUSIVE! Last stash in the universe! After thirty years of being stored in a warehouse you can finally buy one from the largest NOS vintage clothing company in the world. American Ringer acquired these and NOBODY ELSE HAS THEM! ROCK OUT AND ROCK ON FROM AMERICANRINGER.COM
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ORIGINAL Vintage 1976 Farrah Fawcett Logan's Run Sci-Fi POSTER PRINT T-Shirt
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This is easily one of the most rare prints of this beautiful pin-up model ever created. This is Farrah Fawcett's debut movie performance as Holly, two years before she guest starred on The Six Million Dollar Man and four years before her appearance on Charlie's Angels! A very rare original movie publicity print that you'll probably never see again! AmericanRinger.com acquired these and NOBODY ELSE HAS THEM! This is the real deal vintage stuff only available from American Ringer.
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What Plastic Surgery did Farrah Fawcett Have?
There's no question that Farrah Fawcett was one of the most beautiful women of the 1970s. Even though she was only on the television series Charlie's Angles for a year, she was always associated with the show - perhaps even more than the other two "angels" Jacqueline Smith and Kate Jackson. A poster of Fawcett in an orange swimsuit sold an astonishing 30 million copies.
But even the most beautiful people can't avoid getting older. Perhaps because of media pressure to be beautiful, Fawcett underwent plastic surgery as she got older, and sometimes it didn't turn out well. Fawcett is believed to have had a face lift that did not turn out well, eye surgery, lip augmentation, and various injection procedures like Botox and Juvederm.
After the rumored face lift gone wrong, Fawcett is believed to have undergone corrective surgery that resulted in a dramatic improvement. Cosmetic surgeons have gone on record saying that it appears that she had a mid to lower face lift, upper and lower eyelid surgery, Botox, and perhaps a neck tightening procedures.
Some people point to pictures of Fawcett after her 2004 surgery as a cautionary tale that sometimes natural aging is more attractive than trying to achieve a younger look. Others decry the plastic surgery industry overall for promoting anti-aging procedures as "the norm." Internet, television, and movies saturated with surgically perfect stars have the effect of making many ordinary people believe that the standard for good looks has been raised to a level that's unachievable for most people, and that plastic surgery is the only way to "compete" these days.
Ever since her rise to stardom in the 1970s, there has been speculation that Fawcett had breast implants. She never commented one way or the other on that or on any other surgery she had done, but breast augmentation is a common procedure even for women with average sized breasts, and has been for decades.
There is no way of knowing what Fawcett would have looked like had she aged naturally since becoming such a huge star in the 1970s. But she certainly did as much as she could to keep her stunning good looks for as long as possible. One hopes that she felt confident after undergoing cosmetic procedures, and that any physical pain from them was minimal. Sadly, we'll never know what her thoughts and feelings were about aging and plastic surgery.
About the Author
Leonard Dawson is a freelance article writer who writes for Cosmetic Surgery Guru about current issues, technology and news within the cosmetic surgery market.
Farrah Poll: Has anyone NOT seen this poster? Could it be the top-selling poster of all time?
http://images.search.yahoo.com/images/view?back=http%3A%2F%2Fimages.search.yahoo.com%2Fsearch%2Fimages%3Fp%3Dfarrah%2Bposter%26ei%3DUTF-8%26fr%3Db2ie7%26fr2%3Dtab-web&w=304&h=423&imgurl=static.flickr.com%2F2216%2F2319519350_59d95ba8e5.jpg&rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.flickr.com%2Fphotos%2F24223525%40N08%2F2319519350%2F&size=55k&name=Farrah+Fawcett+p...&p=farrah+poster&oid=e3d9c2876374d392&fr2=tab-web&fusr=truesiren&no=16&tt=269&sigr=11ljvhvt5&sigi=11gjr99mr&sigb=12qf415nu
What's really amazing is she was 30ish in that poster. These days, they would have called her over the hill, and that would be that.
Farrah Fawcett Left Off Oscars 'In Memoriam' Tribute Montage
One big name that didn't appear in the Oscars 'In Memoriam' tribute to actors and filmmakers lost in the past year was Farrah Fawcett, who died last June of cancer at the age of 62.
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